textfiles/drugs/MARYJANE/hemp-tx1.txt

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No Compromise
Hemp and the Environment
Though the following issue is controversial, we cannot allow
the type of propaganda that tells us that landfills and nuclear
power are safe to mislead us from the sustainable possibilities
of hemp.
Hemp has been used in everything from papermaking to food
production for over 6,000 years.
Hemp can reduce the land needed to produce paper by over 75%.
This can save over one billion trees per year, while greatly
reducing the toxicity of paper production. All of this is done
without the added chore of sorting paper for recycling!
Virtually all paper produced in the US until the turn of the
century was produced from hemp. Hemp paper lasts longer than
other papers. The original draft of the "Declaration of
Independence" and the Gutenberg Bible are on hemp paper.
Hemp can produce longer lasting denim, canvass, and linen using
fewer acres and pesticides than any other plant! While cotton
uses more pesticides and chemical fertilizers than any other
crop, hemp produces three times more fiber organically. During the
1930s, it was estimated that over half of the linens imported
into the US were made of hemp. Italy still produces fine linens
made of hemp.
Hemp can produce more edible protein per acre than any other
plant including soybeans! The seeds can be used much like soy-
beans to produce a variety of food products.
Hemp can also produce 10 to 50 times the alcohol fuel as corn.
Only 6% of U.S. cropland devoted to hemp is needed to meet all of
the U.S.'s energy needs freeing it from foreign oil conflicts,
acid rain, and nuclear waste.
Over 5,000 textiles can be made from hempfiber while the hurds
off the same plant produce cellulose which can be used in over
25,000 products. Meanwhile the seeds and their oil can be used
to make paints, lamp fuel, lubricants, and be eaten as food.
SOURCES: USDA film "Hemp for Victory" 1942, Popular Mechanics
article "New Billion Dollar Crop" February 1938, USDA
Agricultural Statistics 1916-1942.
For further information contact NO COMPROMISE, 173 Jackson
St., Madison, WI 53704. (608) 241-9716.
(PLEASE COPY AND DISTRIBUTE)